To Permanent Representatives of Member and Observer States of the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council (Geneva, Switzerland)
Excellencies,
As serious human rights violations and abuses continue to be committed in Burundi in a context of widespread impunity, and as the country has entered a long electoral cycle that started with the 2025 legislative and communal elections and will culminate with the 2027 presidential election, and is associated with multiple risk factors of grave human rights violations and atrocities, the UN Human Rights Council should maintain its scrutiny of the country.
At its 60th session (8 September-8 October 2025), it should extend the mandate of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Burundi.
2025 marks ten years since the outbreak of the still unresolved 2015 crisis. The Council’s 60th session will mark ten years since its first meaningful response to the crisis, resolution 30/27, and will be the last session before the tenth anniversary of the Special Session it held to address the crisis in Burundi (17 December 2015).
Ten years on, Burundi’s human rights situation remains of serious concern. No structural reforms have addressed long-standing human rights, governance, justice, and rule of law concerns. Violations continue with impunity, and all the issues highlighted in previous civil society letters remain. They include extrajudicial executions, enforced disappearances, arbitrary arrests and detentions, acts of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, sexual and gender-based violence, severe restrictions to the rights to freedom of opinion, expression, peaceful assembly and association, and serious violations of economic, social and cultural rights.
In this context, justice and other accountability mechanisms are not just silenced; they are systematically weaponised against critics, independent voices and opposition actors. This deliberate abuse of institutional power entrenches repression and undermines the credibility of any national accountability efforts.
Hate speech and inflammatory rhetoric, including at the highest level, remain high as the authorities restrict civic space and target independent civil society and media voices. At the time of writing, journalist Sandra Muhoza remains arbitrarily detained after conflicting judicial decisions.
Some of the violations, including extrajudicial executions and enforced disappearances, are even on the rise, according to local and international civil society reports. Multiple irregularities marred the 5 June 2025 legislative and communal elections, in which the ruling National Council for the Defense of Democracy-Forces for the Defense of Democracy (CNDD-FDD) party won 96.5% of votes and all contested National Assembly seats, as well as almost every seat in commune-level elections. CNDD-FDD officials and the party’s youth league, the Imbonerakure militia, intimidated, harassed, and threatened the population, and key opposition figures were barred from running – leading to “elections without opposition.” Prominent Burundian human rights organisations denounced these irregularities and called for new elections. In parallel, the militarisation of the Imbonerakure militia has been reported, including in the context of armed conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). In a volatile regional context, more than half the total number of Burundians who had gone into exile since April 2015 (over 257,000 persons) remain abroad as refugees.
In his oral report to the Council’s 59th session, in June 2025, the Special Rapporteur, Mr. Fortuné Gaetan Zongo asked: “Ten years later, where are we? Is the crisis resolved?” He said that “the situation is worrying.” In this regard, he stressed that “impunity remains the norm [and is] a major obstacle to reconciliation, [and that] justice is being used against opponents, journalists and human rights defenders.” He also addressed the problem of “abusive land dispossession affecting widows, orphans, or vulnerable families, [which] demonstrates a dynamic of land predation for the benefit of influential members of the ruling party, high-ranking army officers, or influential businessmen without consent or adequate compensation,” which “further undermines women’s economic and social rights.”
Since the adoption of resolution 57/22, in October 2024, not only has the human rights situation deteriorated, with a downward trend for both civil and political rights and economic, social and cultural rights, but Burundi’s national human rights institution, the Independent National Human Rights Commission (CNIDH), saw its President flee the country with his family. This follows the defection of two members of the Commission on Truth and Reconciliation (CVR) and shows that even former appointees fear for their physical integrity and do not trust national institutions, such as the judiciary, to protect them. Despite the decision to uphold the CNIDH’s “A” status by the Global Alliance of National Human Rights Institutions (GANHRI), the CNIDH lacks independence and continues to deliver statements praising the government, including at the Human Rights Council, while refusing to take up politically sensitive cases. This means that there is no nationally-mandated mechanism that is able or willing to protect human rights, including by investigating and reporting on human rights violations, supporting victims and survivors, protecting those at risk, and holding government and other public officials to account.
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In light of previous cycles of abuse prior to, during, and after elections, the international community should remain mobilised to ensure scrutiny of the situation in Burundi, preserving the Special Rapporteur’s documentation role and his ability to report to the Council, at least twice a year.
Several of the Risk Factors outlined in the UN Framework of Analysis for Atrocity Crimes remain present in Burundi. Some, including Risk Factor 8 (“triggering factors or events that may seriously exacerbate existing conditions, such as elections and pivotal activities related to elections”), point to more, not fewer, concerns than one year ago, before the electoral cycle opened and the ruling party closed avenues for peaceful transition through competitive, free and fair elections.
This year will see additional elections, namely Senate and Hill (“collinaires”) elections, and the next presidential election is planned for May 2027. In a context of increased repression of independent and opposition voices, the Burundian Government continues to disregard or minimise the severity of human rights challenges in the country. It refuses to grant access to and meaningfully cooperate with independent human rights bodies and mechanisms, and has effectively ceased its cooperation with the Council’s mechanisms, in violation of its Membership obligations. All requests by the Special Rapporteur to visit the country have either been rejected or remained unanswered.
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The Council should make clear that being a Member comes with an obligation to uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights, as well as an enhanced responsibility to accept scrutiny. In the absence of progress, and in light of ongoing violations and impunity, we consider that there is no basis to depart from the Council’s current approach. Until measurable and sustainable progress on key human rights issues of concern, including addressing impunity for past and ongoing violations, has been made, the Council should ensure continued scrutiny of Burundi’s human rights situation.
Consequently, at its 60th session, the Council should adopt a resolution that reflects the concerns over the country’s human rights situation, including risk factors of serious violations and atrocities, and aims to:
We thank you for your attention to these pressing issues and stand ready to provide your delegation with further information as required.
Sincerely,
This letter is also available to read and download in French.
Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Avenue, Suite 5203
New York, NY 10016-4309, USA